Merv Griffin

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Mervyn Edward "Merv" Griffin, Jr. (born on July 6, 1925, in San Mateo, California) is an American talk show host, entertainer, pianist, television personality and executive. He began his career as a singer and also appeared in movies and on Broadway; he later became host of his own TV show, The Merv Griffin Show, and an entertainment business magnate.

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He started as a singer on radio at age 19, appearing on "San Francisco Sketchbook," a nationally syndicated program based at KFRC. He earned enough to form his own record label, Panda Records, and his self-released album Songs by Merv Griffin was the first American album recorded on magnetic tape. Freddy Martin was a fan of the radio show and asked Griffin to tour with his orchestra, which he did for four years. However, Griffin became popular with nightclub audiences as a solo act. He scored a number one hit with I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts, which sold over three million copies. During one of his nightclub performances, he was discovered by Doris Day who arranged for a screen test at Warner Bros. Studios. His open-mouthed kiss with Kathryn Grayson in his debut film, So This Is Love (1953), was the first such shown in theaters.

Meanwhile, he appeared regularly on such television shows as The Arthur Murray Show and The Jack Paar Show. From 1958 to 1962 he hosted a game show produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman called Play Your Hunch. The show appeared on all three networks, but primarily on NBC. He also hosted a primetime game show for ABC, called Keep Talking.

Griffin scored a coup when Jack Paar accidentally emerged onto the set of Play Your Hunch during a live broadcast (Paar was superstitiously trying to avoid the elevators at Rockefeller Center), and Griffin got him to stay for a spontaneous interview. Griffin later substituted for Paar on The Tonight Show, leading NBC to offer him his own daytime talk show in 1962. That program failed, but NBC offered him the opportunity to host a new game show, Word for Word, in 1963, which Griffin produced as well. This led Griffin to produce the far more successful Jeopardy! the following year.

In 1965, Griffin launched a syndicated 90-minute talk show that aired in a variety of time slots throughout North America (many stations ran it in the daytime, some broadcast it opposite Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show, and it was carried for many years in prime time on WNEW in New York). On all of his talk shows he was not shy about tackling controversial subjects, especially the Vietnam War.

Griffin moved to CBS starting August 18, 1969 in a show that aired directly opposite Carson at 11:30 p.m. Always a shrewd businessman, Griffin demanded and got a bigger salary than Carson, but CBS roiled Griffin with its constant interference with his operation. Griffin stayed there for three years; meanwhile, his role on the syndicated show was filled by the British interviewer David Frost, who commuted across the Atlantic as he filled jobs on both sides of the ocean. Griffin's show was produced in New York for the first year and from Los Angeles thereafter. In 1970, producers at NBC's Today show approached Griffin to co-host the show, but he never did. Griffin's late night show consistently finished behind Carson's in the ratings, and occasionally struggled to compete with Dick Cavett on ABC. CBS pressured Griffin to fire his long-time sidekick Arthur Treacher, who had been his television mentor, but that did not help. Sensing that the CBS axe would soon fall, and disenchanted with the network's meddling ways, Griffin put out feelers to television syndicators. Griffin actually had a lucrative new deal all set before CBS would let him go. In 1972, the CBS show was canceled and he returned to syndication, displacing Frost. He eventually retired from the show in 1986.

In 1975, NBC cancelled Jeopardy! after moving it twice on their daytime schedule, despite having an additional year on its network contract left to fulfill. Griffin was allowed to produce the show's successor, Wheel of Fortune. A modest hit on daytime television with Chuck Woolery and Susan Stafford as host and hostess, it became a phenomenon in 1983 in the syndication market with Pat Sajak and Vanna White in the same respective roles. (Jeopardy! would also start airing in first-run syndication in 1984.) These two shows made him an extremely wealthy man. Other game shows produced by Merv Griffin included spinoffs of Wheel and Jeopardy! for children, Wheel 2000, and Jep! respectively; along with Rock & Roll Jeopardy! for purveyors of pop music trivia; a teen-oriented game called Click! and in association with Wink Martindale, Headline Chasers. He also produced Let's Play Post Office for NBC in 1965; Reach For the Stars for NBC in 1967; One In a Million for ABC in 1967, and in 1990, an ambitious but unsuccessful attempt at making a game show out of the venerable board-game, Monopoly. Arguably, Griffin's biggest game show failure, was Ruckus, with magician-comedian The Amazing Johnathan as host of a wild, slapstick affair that took stunts and questions-and-answers to a bizarre level. The show eminated from Griffin's Resorts Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City. Originally intended to be shown locally in New York City and Philadelphia, with the prospect of national syndication, it lasted only a few weeks; it would appear in rerun form for a time on GSN when it was known as Game Show Network.

Upon his retirement, he sold his production company, Merv Griffin Enterprises, to Columbia Pictures Television unit for $250 million, which was the largest acquisition of an entertainment company owned by a single individual at that time. Following the sale, Forbes named him the richest Hollywood performer in history. He retained the title of executive producer of both shows.

In 2007, Griffin's production company, Merv Griffin Entertainment, began pre-production on a new syndicated game show Let's Play Crosswords. The show will be produced at WMAQ-TV in Chicago in partnership with Program Partners and the William Morris Agency and is expected to air beginning in September 2007. NBC-owned-and-operated stations in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco and Dallas will carry the show, which should ensure its launch.

Griffin ventured into real estate, purchasing the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills. He also purchased Resorts Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City from Donald Trump in 1988. He still owns a ranch near Carmel, California where he raises thoroughbred racehorses, as well as St. Clerans Manor set in an 18th century estate once owned by director John Huston, near Galway, Ireland. In the 1980s, Griffin purchased Paradise Island in the Bahamas for $400 million from Donald Trump, but he later sold it for just $125 million.

In March 2001, Merv returned to singing with the release of the album It's Like a Dream.

Griffin has a son, Tony by ex-wife Julann Griffin, and two grandchildren.

  • I've Got a Lovely Bunch of Coconuts
  • Wilhelmina
  • Never Been Kissed

Persondata
NAME Griffin, Mervyn Edward
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American singer and television game show producer
DATE OF BIRTH July 6, 1925
PLACE OF BIRTH San Mateo, California
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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